Effect of the solar wind density on the evolution of normal and inverse coronal mass ejections
S. Hosteaux, E. Chan\'e, S. Poedts

TL;DR
This study uses 2.5D MHD simulations to analyze how background solar wind density and magnetic polarity influence the evolution, speed, and structure of normal and inverse CMEs from the Sun to Earth.
Contribution
It provides a detailed quantification of how magnetic polarity and solar wind density affect CME propagation, deformation, and magnetic cloud characteristics during their journey to Earth.
Findings
Inverse CMEs are faster than normal CMEs under similar conditions.
Magnetic cloud density peaks depend on polarity and wind density.
Shock magnitude remains unaffected by CME polarity.
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of both normal and inverse CMEs ejected at different initial velocities, and observe the effect of the background wind density and their magnetic polarity on their evolution up to 1 AU. We performed 2.5D simulations by solving the magnetohydrodynamic equations on a radially stretched grid, employing a block-based adaptive mesh refinement scheme based on a density threshold to achieve high resolution following the evolution of the magnetic clouds and the leading bow shocks. All the simulations discussed in the present paper were performed using the same initial grid and numerical methods. The polarity of the internal magnetic field of the CME has a substantial effect on its propagation velocity and on its deformation and erosion during its evolution towards Earth. We quantified the effects of the polarity of the internal magnetic field of the CMEs and of the…
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